Authoring tools for scholarly communication. Create interactive web pages or formal research papers from markdown source. Living Papers is intended to be a "language toolkit" for parsing, transforming, and rendering documents.
To get up and running quickly, use the Living Papers project template. Then take a look at other example articles.
This repo is a research testbed for Living Papers development. There will be bugs. Contributions (issues, PRs, etc) are welcome!
For more about Living Papers' motivation and development please see the Living Papers UIST'23 paper and overview video.
To cite Living Papers in research publication, please use the following citation data:
@inproceedings{heer2023living,
author = {Heer, Jeffrey and Conlen, Matthew and Devireddy, Vishal and Nguyen, Tu and Horowitz, Joshua},
title = {Living Papers: A Language Toolkit for Augmented Scholarly Communication},
year = {2023},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3586183.3606791},
doi = {10.1145/3586183.3606791},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 36th Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology},
articleno = {42},
numpages = {13},
series = {UIST '23}
}
Before working with Living Papers, set up your local environment:
- Install Node.js and npm if you don't have them already. We recommend using a node version manager like nvm. Node v16.17 or higher is recommended.
- Install pandoc. You should be able to run
pandoc
from the command line. A recent version of Pandoc (v2.18 or higher) is recommended. - Install other software packages as needed:
- To use R code blocks, install R along with the
knitr
package and any other libraries you wish to use. - To publish LaTeX / PDF output, install a TeX distribution such as TeX Live. You should be able to run
pdflatex
andbibtex
from the command line.
To use Living Papers for a new publishing project, you can install the @living-papers/cli
npm package, which provides the lpub
utility to convert source to output documents.
That said, we recommend copying the project template repo for a pre-configured authoring setup.
Clone this monorepo, run npm install
to install JavaScript dependencies.
Once installed, you can:
- Run
npm run build
to build the monorepo package exports. - Run
npm run test
to run test cases across monorepo packages. - Run
npm run lint
to lint source code across monorepo packages. - Run
npx lpub filename.md
to compile a source file in the current directory.
The examples
folder contains example Living Papers articles. Within the folder for each example, run npm run build
to produce compiled output article(s). Be sure to run npm run build
at the monorepo level before trying to build examples.
This repository uses a monorepo organization. Here is an overview of the folder structure:
examples
: Example Living Papers articlespackages
: Primary Living Papers packagesast
: Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) manipulationcli
: Command line interface programscompiler
: Article parser and compilercomponents
: Web components for HTML outputruntime
: Reactive runtime for HTML outputruntime-compiler
: JavaScript parser/compiler for the reactive runtime
templates
: Article templates